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Elegance Coral Care Guide: How to Keep Catalaphyllia Healthy in a Reef Tank
Learn how to care for Elegance Coral in a reef tank, including lighting, flow, sandbed placement, feeding, water parameters, aggression, tissue health and common stress signs.
Learn Elegance Coral care for reef tanks, including lighting, flow, feeding, sandbed placement, water parameters, sweeper tentacles, tissue recession and common problems.
by Scott Shiles • May 14, 2026
Elegance Coral, scientifically known as Catalaphyllia, is a dramatic large polyp stony coral known for long flowing tentacles, bright color, and an anemone-like appearance in reef aquariums. Green, purple, blue, pink, cream, and fluorescent varieties can create strong movement and color under blue and balanced reef lighting.
Elegance Coral is beautiful, but it is not a coral to crowd, blast with flow, or place on sharp rockwork. Its fleshy tissue is delicate, its sting can be strong, and unhealthy specimens can decline quickly if water quality, placement, or handling is poor. Reef keepers with stable systems and careful placement habits usually have the best success.
At Extreme Corals, Elegance Coral is a strong choice for reef keepers who want a bold LPS centerpiece with movement, color, and a unique lagoon-style look. This guide explains Elegance Coral care, including lighting, water flow, placement, feeding, water parameters, aggression, tank mates, tissue health, common problems, and long-term success. For broader reef husbandry help, you can also browse our coral care guide library.
What Is Elegance Coral?
Elegance Coral is a fleshy large polyp stony coral with a hard skeleton and long tentacles that extend from a large oral disc. When healthy, it can look similar to an anemone because the tentacles sway in the current and expand broadly across the sandbed.
Elegance Corals are popular because they offer:
- Long flowing tentacles with strong reef movement
- Bright green, purple, blue, pink, cream, or fluorescent coloration
- Large sandbed centerpiece potential
- Visible feeding response when healthy
- Unique anemone-like appearance without being an anemone
- Strong visual impact in LPS-focused reef tanks
Although Elegance Coral can be very rewarding, it is usually best for reef keepers who already understand stable reef parameters, gentle flow, careful acclimation, and coral spacing.
Natural Habitat and Reef Tank Behavior
Elegance Corals are found throughout Indo-Pacific reef environments, including Australia, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, and reef areas around the Great Barrier Reef. They are often associated with sandy or muddy lagoon floors, sheltered reef environments, and lower-energy areas where lighting is moderate and flow is gentle.
In reef aquariums, this natural background points toward sandbed placement, low to moderate or moderate lighting, and low to moderate indirect flow. A healthy Elegance Coral should expand fully, hold stable color, and show no spreading tissue recession, exposed skeleton, brown jelly, or detachment from the skeleton.
Best Water Parameters for Elegance Coral
Stable water chemistry is one of the most important parts of Elegance Coral care. This coral can be sensitive to sudden changes, especially in salinity, alkalinity, temperature, nitrate, and phosphate.
| Parameter | Recommended Range |
|---|---|
| Temperature | 76-80°F |
| Salinity | 1.024-1.026 specific gravity |
| pH | 8.1-8.4 |
| Alkalinity | 8-10 dKH |
| Calcium | 400-450 ppm |
| Magnesium | 1250-1350 ppm |
| Nitrate | 2-10 ppm |
| Phosphate | 0.03-0.07 ppm |
Elegance Coral usually does best in clean, stable reef water with measurable but controlled nutrients. Water that is too stripped can leave fleshy LPS corals looking thin or pale, while excessive nutrients can fuel algae, bacterial issues, and tissue irritation around the skeleton.
Lighting Requirements for Elegance Coral
Elegance Coral usually prefers moderate lighting, and many specimens do well in a practical starting range around 100-200 PAR. The exact target depends on the coral’s source, color, previous lighting, tank depth, and overall health.
Too much light can cause bleaching, fading, contraction, or tissue recession. Too little light can reduce color and long-term energy. New Elegance Corals should be started in lower to moderate light and adjusted gradually only after they settle. For more detail on PAR, spectrum, and coral acclimation, review our reef tank lighting guide.
Signs Elegance Coral may be getting too much light include:
- Faded or washed-out coloration
- Bleaching or paling
- Tentacles retracting during peak light
- Tissue pulling tight against the skeleton
- Better expansion in shaded periods
Blue-spectrum reef lighting can bring out strong fluorescence, but full tentacle extension and tissue health matter more than maximum brightness.
Water Flow for Elegance Coral
Elegance Coral prefers low to moderate indirect flow. The goal is gentle movement through the tentacles, not a hard blast that bends the coral sharply or pulls tissue against the skeleton.
Good Elegance Coral flow should:
- Create slow, gentle tentacle movement
- Allow full tissue expansion
- Prevent detritus from collecting around the base
- Avoid direct powerhead blasts
- Support oxygen exchange and waste removal
Strong direct flow can cause tissue recession, detachment, or long-term stress. If the coral folds hard to one side, stays retracted, or shows damage on the side facing a pump, reduce flow or move it to a calmer location.
Best Placement for Elegance Coral in a Reef Tank
Elegance Coral is usually best placed on a stable sandbed or smooth lower area rather than sharp rockwork. In nature, many Elegance Corals are associated with soft substrate, and in aquariums their fleshy underside can be damaged by rough surfaces.
Good placement options include:
- Open sandbed areas
- Lower tank zones with moderate lighting
- Smooth rubble only if secure and gentle
- Areas with low to moderate indirect flow
- Zones with plenty of space from nearby corals
Avoid placing Elegance Coral where sand constantly blows onto the tissue, where fish bury it, where it rubs against rock, or where nearby corals can sting it. If you are building an LPS-focused reef, browse our LPS coral selection with spacing and sandbed room in mind.
Elegance Coral Aggression and Sweeper Tentacles
Elegance Coral can have a strong sting and should be treated as an aggressive LPS coral when planning placement. Its long tentacles can irritate or damage nearby corals if allowed to touch them.
To reduce aggression problems:
- Leave at least 6 inches of space around the coral when possible.
- Do not place Elegance Coral directly beside peaceful LPS corals, mushrooms, or zoanthids.
- Watch tentacle reach during full daytime expansion.
- Consider flow direction because tentacles may extend downstream.
- Plan for full expansion, not just the skeleton size.
Elegance Coral looks best when it has its own open zone where it can expand fully without contacting other corals.
Feeding Elegance Coral
Elegance Coral is photosynthetic, but it benefits from occasional target feeding. Feeding may support tissue fullness, tentacle extension, growth, and recovery after shipping or stress.
Good foods for Elegance Coral include:
- Mysis shrimp
- Small pieces of marine fish or shrimp
- Finely chopped seafood
- Small LPS coral pellets
- Zooplankton-based coral foods
Feed small portions one to two times per week as a safe starting point. The source article recommends more frequent feeding, but in many reef tanks, lighter controlled feeding is safer because overfeeding can raise nutrients, irritate tissue, and increase bacterial risk.
Tank Mates and Compatibility
Elegance Coral can be kept with many peaceful reef fish and invertebrates, but it should be protected from animals that nip fleshy coral tissue, steal food aggressively, or repeatedly irritate the tentacles.
Good tank mates often include:
- Clownfish with caution
- Gobies
- Blennies
- Peaceful wrasses
- Reef-safe snails
- Cleaner shrimp with caution during feeding
Use caution with some angelfish, butterflyfish, large hermit crabs, and shrimp that repeatedly steal food from the coral. Also avoid sand-sifting animals that bury the coral or drop sand onto its fleshy tissue throughout the day.
Growth Rate and Long-Term Development
Elegance Coral has a moderate growth rate in stable reef tanks. Most reef keepers measure success by full expansion, stable color, and healthy tissue rather than rapid skeletal growth.
Healthy long-term development depends on:
- Stable salinity and temperature
- Steady alkalinity, calcium, and magnesium
- Moderate lighting
- Low to moderate indirect flow
- Stable sandbed placement
- Balanced nutrients
- Protection from tissue damage and coral contact
A healthy Elegance Coral can remain a standout centerpiece for years when it is protected from direct flow, sharp surfaces, and unstable water chemistry.
Can Elegance Coral Be Fragged?
Elegance Coral is not commonly fragged because it usually has a sensitive single-polyp structure over a continuous skeleton. Cutting it can cause severe tissue damage, infection, and recession.
For most reef keepers, Elegance Coral should be treated as a display coral rather than a propagation coral. If cutting is attempted, it should only be done by experienced coral cutters with proper tools, stable recovery conditions, and an understanding that the risk is high.
Common Elegance Coral Problems
Most Elegance Coral problems come from tissue damage, excessive light, direct flow, unstable water chemistry, poor sandbed placement, pests, bacterial infection, or irritation from tank mates.
Tissue Recession
Tissue recession may be caused by alkalinity swings, rough substrate, direct flow, light shock, nearby stinging corals, fish nipping, poor water quality, or bacterial issues. Check placement and water stability first.
Brown Jelly Disease
Brown jelly disease can appear as brown, slimy tissue decay and can spread quickly through fleshy LPS corals. If suspected, isolate the coral if possible, improve water quality, increase appropriate flow, and use a coral dip when needed.
Elegance Coral Syndrome
Some Elegance Corals may show swelling, poor extension, tissue recession, or rapid decline even when the tank appears stable. If this occurs, avoid repeated handling, improve water quality, isolate if needed, and inspect for infection or pests.
Bleaching or Faded Color
Bleaching or fading is often connected to too much light, sudden lighting changes, low nutrients, or stress. Move the coral to a lower-light area or reduce intensity gradually if light stress is likely.
Pests and Irritation
Flatworms, nuisance algae, sand buildup, and hitchhikers can irritate Elegance Coral tissue. Inspect new corals carefully, and review our coral pests and predators guide if damage appears without an obvious water quality issue.
Handling and Acclimation
Elegance Coral should be handled very carefully because the fleshy tissue can tear against the skeleton. Avoid touching the inflated tissue or tentacles directly. Support the base or skeleton only when necessary and do not squeeze the coral during transfer.
Good acclimation practices include:
- Temperature acclimate the coral.
- Inspect for tissue damage, pests, and algae.
- Dip only when appropriate and follow product directions.
- Place on a clean, stable sandbed.
- Start in low to moderate or moderate lighting.
- Use low to moderate indirect flow.
- Avoid repeated moves after placement.
A new Elegance Coral may take time to expand fully. Stable placement is usually better than constant repositioning.
Maintenance Tips for Elegance Coral
Elegance Coral care is mostly about protecting tissue and keeping water stable. Because it often sits on the sandbed, debris can collect around it if flow is too weak or poorly directed.
Helpful maintenance habits include:
- Use a turkey baster to gently remove detritus around the coral.
- Keep sand from repeatedly covering the tissue.
- Test alkalinity and salinity regularly.
- Perform regular water changes.
- Watch for fish or inverts stealing food or picking at tissue.
- Keep aggressive corals out of reach.
A healthy Elegance Coral should look clean, expanded, colorful, and free from sand abrasion, algae growth, exposed skeleton, or brown jelly.
Signs of a Healthy Elegance Coral
A healthy Elegance Coral should show long tentacle extension, stable color, and fleshy tissue that remains firmly attached to the skeleton. It may retract somewhat at night or during maintenance, but it should not stay shrunken or show spreading tissue loss.
Healthy signs include:
- Full tentacle extension during the day
- Stable bright or fluorescent color
- No spreading recession
- No brown jelly or tissue decay
- Good feeding response
- Clean sandbed placement
- No signs of fish or invert damage
An Elegance Coral that expands fully and holds color is usually doing well. A coral that remains shrunken, pale, slimy, torn, or receding needs closer inspection.
Related Corals You May Also Like
If you like Elegance Corals, these related coral categories and care guides can help you build a colorful LPS reef tank:
- LPS Corals - Browse colorful large polyp stony corals for reef aquariums.
- New Arrival Corals - See recently added WYSIWYG corals for your reef tank.
- Scott's Handpicked Corals - Explore standout corals selected for color and quality.
- Hammer Coral Care Guide - Compare another flowing LPS coral with sweeper tentacles.
- Frogspawn Coral Care Guide - Learn care for another movement-focused Euphyllia-style coral.
- Trachyphyllia Coral Care Guide - Review care for a fleshy sandbed LPS coral.
- LPS vs SPS Corals - Compare care needs across major stony coral groups.
- Coral Care Guides - Browse care resources for LPS, SPS, soft corals, mushrooms, and zoanthids.
Shop Elegance Corals and LPS Corals
Elegance Coral is a dramatic LPS coral for reef keepers who want flowing tentacles, bright color, and a strong sandbed centerpiece. With moderate lighting, gentle indirect flow, stable water chemistry, careful placement, and enough spacing, it can become one of the most impressive corals in a reef aquarium.
Browse LPS corals, new arrival corals, and featured corals at ExtremeCorals.com to find healthy corals that match your reef tank.
Frequently Asked Questions About Elegance Coral Care
Is Elegance Coral beginner friendly?
Elegance Coral is usually best for intermediate to advanced reef keepers. It needs stable water, careful sandbed placement, moderate lighting, gentle flow, and protection from tissue damage.
How much light does Elegance Coral need?
Elegance Coral usually does best under moderate lighting, often around 100-200 PAR. Start new corals lower and acclimate them gradually.
What flow is best for Elegance Coral?
Elegance Coral prefers low to moderate indirect flow. Strong direct flow can damage tissue, cause recession, or prevent full tentacle extension.
Where should I place Elegance Coral in a reef tank?
Elegance Coral is usually best placed on a stable sandbed or smooth lower area where it receives moderate light, gentle flow, and plenty of room from other corals.
Does Elegance Coral need feeding?
Elegance Coral is photosynthetic but benefits from occasional target feeding with small meaty foods or LPS coral foods one to two times per week.
Can Elegance Coral sting other corals?
Yes, Elegance Coral has a strong sting and can damage nearby corals. Leave at least 6 inches of space when possible and plan for full tentacle extension.
Why is my Elegance Coral not opening?
Elegance Coral may stay closed because of excessive flow, lighting shock, unstable water, tissue damage, pests, fish nipping, or irritation from nearby corals.
Can Elegance Coral be fragged?
Fragging is not usually recommended because Elegance Coral has a sensitive single-polyp structure. Cutting it can cause serious tissue damage and infection.
About the Author
Scott Shiles is the owner of ExtremeCorals.com, which he has operated for over 25 years and is recognized as one of the early dedicated live coral websites on the internet. A lifelong reef keeper since 1984, Scott has decades of hands-on experience maintaining marine aquariums and previously owned and operated a brick and mortar aquarium retail store for 10 years, including five years alongside Extreme Corals. He holds a degree in Marine Biology and has personally selected and sold hundreds of thousands of live corals. An avid scuba diver who has explored reef systems around the world, Scott shares practical coral care and husbandry knowledge based on real world reef experience.